| Version 13 (modified by brecht, 6 years ago) (diff) |
|---|
Table of Contents
Guidelines
This page discusses some guidelines about using the HaikuPorts' Trac site.
Merging
A port should eventually be merged with the original software's main source tree. Many open source projects use the GNU Autotools in order to be portable on a source level. While the concept is great, Autoconf and Automake are quite daunting. It is however worthwhile to learn at least a minimum about the GNU Autotools. The PortingTips contain links to more information about Autoconf and Automake.
The PortLog
When porting an application or library, it is strongly advised you keep a log of:
- what options are necessary for building on Haiku/Zeta?/BeOS; and
- what problems you run into, and the solutions to them.
This information can be very helpful to others, after all.
When you get stuck and give up (hey, don't feel bad), create a new ticket explaining the problem. Also link to this ticket from within the port's PortLog. Consult TracLinks on how to do that. The tickets should be assigned to the component that corresponds to the port.
Platforms
Because of the incompatibilities between the various BeOS platforms, a port should be tested on all of them. BONE binaries however, should be able to run on Dano and Zeta, from what I hear. Correct me (Brecht) if I'm wrong. So that's one target for the three of those. R5 (5.0.3) and Haiku are very different from BONE and are therefore two other targets.
The status of a port is described by the following keywords:
- untested: not tested on this platform
- broken: doesn't build
- unstable: builds, but fails tests or has obvious flaws
- stable: passes tests and seems to be working as it should
Layout
The layout of the portlogs is controlled by the portlog plug-in. To create a new portlog page, locate its Gentoo Portage category, then head over to the [PortLog/AddPort?] page to create an entry for the port in the database. Once the entry is created you'll be able to create a version, once the version is created you'll need to create a revision 1, which is where you'll write down your build notes.
If the portlog already exists check for prior builds, there might be notes already there which could point out things you might have missed. Don't remove old versions or revisions from the portlog, the information can still be valuable.
